logo
N.L. hasn't buried a single unclaimed body since legislation change in January

N.L. hasn't buried a single unclaimed body since legislation change in January

Yahoo16-05-2025

The government of Newfoundland and Labrador made a legislation change four months ago meant to tackle the growing number of unclaimed bodies being held in freezer units at the Health Sciences Centre in St. John's — but it has yet to bury a single person.
According to the amended legislation, which was filed on Dec. 24 and came into effect on Jan. 1, Newfoundland and Labrador Health Services (NLHS) has the power to bury unclaimed remains after two weeks of searching for next of kin and then five days after the identity of the person is posted online on a dedicated website.
The website also has yet to launch.
Health authority spokesperson Mikaela Etchegary told CBC News in an email that work is still ongoing on the legislation and the website.
"N.L. Health Services handles unclaimed human remains respectfully and will take steps to identify and contact individuals who may be entitled to claim the remains, prior to posting information to the web page," she wrote.
Etchegary said the number of remains still long-term storage facilities changes frequently, but as of May 14 there were 27 bodies.
"To date, no burials for unclaimed remains have been completed by N.L. Health Services as we finalize operationalizing the legislation," she wrote.
CBC News first reported the health authority was storing 28 bodies in freezer units in an alleyway on hospital property more than a year ago. It was due to a lack of space in the morgue, which doubles as the Office of the Chief Medical Examiner.
Over the summer, NLHS relocated the freezers to the hospital's underground parking garage and built a wall around it.
Health Minister Krista Lynn Howell, who took over the portfolio last week, says there is a procedure in place for the health authority to deal with unclaimed bodies.
"We do expect that they are following that to the letter on how they conduct the operations around these unclaimed remains. So they have a more clear pathway as to how they handle this," Howell told reporters on Thursday.
But even with the website not up and running, she wouldn't say whether the legislation was working.
"That would be our expectation of NLHS and certainly we'll have further conversations about that with the CEO and ensuring that we do the most appropriate measures to, with dignity, handle any unclaimed remains," Howell said.
Progressive Conservative MHA and health critic Barry Petten says it's alarming that dozens of bodies are still in storage and that it reflects poorly on the province.
"The province brought in this legislation, they were going to come up with processes," he said.
"We're finding out there's still bodies in these coolers. It's just not satisfactory."
Petten says no matter how someone lived or died, people deserve a dignified burial.
Given the legislation hasn't been operational after months, Petten says he questions the government's willingness to act on the problem.
"I don't think that's a satisfactory answer."
Download our free CBC News app to sign up for push alerts for CBC Newfoundland and Labrador. Sign up for our daily headlines newsletter here. Click here to visit our landing page.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Music Strikes a Chord for Brain Health
Music Strikes a Chord for Brain Health

Medscape

time39 minutes ago

  • Medscape

Music Strikes a Chord for Brain Health

Music's influence on the brain is documented in conditions ranging from dementia, to epilepsy. Both music participation and appreciation are tied to improvements in executive function and memory so how close are we to harnessing music as a targeted therapeutic tool. One researcher at the forefront of this work is Edward Large, PhD, a professor at the University of Connecticut in Storrs, Connecticut, and director of its Music Dynamics Laboratory. He told Medscape Medical News that he is optimistic about research suggesting that music can help, 'not just with depression and anxiety but with more profound neurological and psychological disorders.' However, he added that music's benefits aren't yet fully understood. Robert Zatorre, PhD, founding co-director of the International Laboratory for Brain, Music, and Sound Research in Montreal, Quebec, Canada, cautions against overstating its therapeutic power. 'Music is not a magic pill; it's not a panacea; it doesn't cure everything,' said Zatorre who is also a professor at the Montreal Neurological Institute at McGill University, Montreal, Quebec, Canada. Instead, it's important to define under what circumstances music could be beneficial and in what ways. 'And that's where the research is right now' he said. Robert Zatorre, PhD One challenge is music's deeply personal nature — what resonates with one person may leave another unmoved. Variables such as culture, age, personal history, social context, and even the nature of the neurological condition can influence how someone will respond to music-based interventions, said Zatorre. Brain Rhythms and Memory Large, a former president of the Society for Music Perception and Cognition and a musician himself, believes that one of the most important messages from research is the effect that music has on the rhythm of the brain. Brain rhythms or waves, also known as neural oscillations, are patterns of brain activity associated with various cognitive processes and behaviors. In healthy brains, slow theta waves (4-8 Hz) and fast gamma waves (30-100 Hz) work together (coupling) to encode and retrieve new memories. Alzheimer's disease (AD) is characterized by disruptions in gamma waves and atypical cross-frequency coupling. Edward Large, PhD 'Music is really the most powerful stimulus we have for synchronizing brain rhythms,' said Large. His group is testing whether stimulating synchrony in the gamma frequency can help treat AD. 'That's the frequency at which neurons in the hippocampus synchronize when they're retrieving a memory', he said. Noninvasive, gamma-frequency, auditory-visual stimulation has been shown to improve AD-related biomarkers and memory in animal models. Large is CEO of Oscillo Biosciences which is developing music based interventions for humans. He explained how such interventions might work: The individual listens to self-selected music and watches a rhythmic light stimulus that is synchronized to the music as their brain waves are monitored via electroencephalography. The light show works in concert with the music to stimulate theta and gamma neural rhythms and phase-amplitude coupling (See photo). It takes both the music and the synchronized light to have a similar effect to that seen for transcranial alternating-current stimulation, he said. An early test of Oscillo Biosciences' music-based intervention for AD Parkinson's Disease (PD) In addition to its potential memory boosting, music can help improve motor control. A music app was shown to improve gait and mood in patients with PD. Daniel J. Levitin, PhD, a neuroscientist and professor emeritus of psychology at McGill University noted in a recent interview with CBC Radio, that music's steady beat can act as 'an external timekeeper' for patients with PD, helping them to walk better because of the auditory stimulation. For multiple sclerosis (MS), Levitin said that music can activate non-demyelinated circuits in order to help with motor control. He echoed Zatorre's view that while the idea of a music prescription is appealing, what works best for a patient seems to be highly individualized. 'It's not like there is a single healing song or a list of healing songs,' he said in the interview. Instead, brain scans show that different types of songs can produce 'almost identical' brain activity in the limbic system, which is closely involved in experiencing pleasure, Levitin added. The Pleasure Principle The pleasure that music brings may be the source of its positive effects. 'I'm convinced that a lot of the benefits of these musical interventions act via the reward system,' said Zatorre who has conducted several related studies and authored a chapter on ' Musical Enjoyment and the Reward Circuits of the Brain ' for a book on Music and Mind edited by opera singer Renée Fleming. By engaging the reward system 'it has knock-on effects on a lot of behaviors and cognitions, including social cognition and memory and language,' he said. Zatorre theorized that music heard by a patient with a memory disorder will activate the reward pathway and simultaneously enhance the retrieval of certain memories. 'That's something that has been observed anecdotally in many patients with neurodegenerative disorders,' he said. There is evidence that the connectivity of the auditory and reward systems is preserved in people with mild cognitive impairment and early AD opening up a potential pathway for early treatment. 'I'm not sure we're there yet. But it's something that people are excited about,' said Zatorre. Familiar music tends to elicit a greater neural response, especially in older people, because once we reach a certain age, we know what we like and sticking to that brings enjoyment, which is linked to dopamine, explained Zatorre. The reward system is highly reactive in younger people. 'We not only fall in love with people [more easily] at that age, we fall in love with all sorts of things and places and movies and music. And that tends to stay with us,' Zatorre said. Large is currently conducting a functional MRI study in patients with AD that compares music that is self-selected and 'meaningful' to the participants with music that is merely familiar. The meaningful music activates important parts of the brain such as the auditory cortex, hippocampus, and reward centers more than the familiar music, he reported. 'So if you're trying to have an impact on your brain, I think you should listen to the music that you love.' Sing Like There's Nobody Listening? A number of recent studies have suggested that physically participating in music may be even better for the brain than passively listening (Figure). In a large nested study published last year, playing a musical instrument was linked to better executive function in older adults, with stronger links for woodwind instruments. Keyboard playing was associated with better working memory compared to not playing any instrument. This study did not show any significant associations between listening to music and cognitive performance but singing was associated with better executive function. Group singing may be particularly beneficial. A Finnish study tied singing in a choir to enhanced brain-structure connectivity across the lifespan of participants with no neurologic diagnoses at baseline. Another recent study in 50 patients with chronic aphasia after stroke found that those assigned to participate in weekly sessions of group singing had improved communication and responsive speech production 5 months later compared to those who received standard of care. 'It has to do with the vocal motor control, the ability to control your larynx and your breathing and your articulators, as well as the vocalization that singing requires as opposed to speaking,' said Zatorre, who was not involved with the research. He added that the social aspect of the intervention is also important, especially the 'singing together with other people who are suffering the same difficulties as you.' Hope for the Tone Deaf But what about people with congenital amusia ie, the tone deaf? Zatorre noted that about 50% of people who are tone deaf have perfect rhythm. 'They may not have the pitch correct, but they still are on time. So they can clap, or tap, or march, or dance, along to the beat,' he said. While many may think they are tone deaf, it's estimated that only 1.5%of the general population have true congenital amusia and even fewer also have no rhythm. 'They may not enjoy the music itself but could enjoy the more social aspects of it. It's enjoying bonding with others, even if you're singing off-key,' said Zatorre. He pointed out that patients with aphasia usually don't sing very well, 'but that's not the point.' Instead, the goal is improved outcome, he added. As the saying goes 'sing like there's nobody listening.' Music As Preventive Medicine? Could music be used as a preventive intervention to stave off, say, dementia in younger at-risk individuals? 'I think the answer is [that] we don't really know,' Large said. Although there are still questions about whether amyloid beta (Aβ) plaques are a cause or a symptom of AD, it's been shown that there is a desynchrony of rhythms in the gamma frequency band before a buildup of Aβ plaques occurs, he explained. 'I think that offers some hope that these rhythm-based therapies might have a preventive impact,' said Large. Zatorre acknowledged that research on music as a preventive intervention is 'quite scarce,' but noted that adding music can still improve quality of life. 'Music is an important art form that almost all people are sensitive to. If you're having a better quality of life, that will enhance everything. Even if it doesn't prevent the formation of plaques in your brain, you will still have a happier existence. And then if you do develop any type of degenerative disorder, you'll have more tools in your toolbox to help you cope,' he said. However, Zatorre noted that the same could be said for cooking or exercise or anything else that gives pleasure to an individual. 'I worry that music may have been a bit oversold to people, especially from those who are promoting a website or some type of self-help product. So I think caution is in order,' he said.

Owner Panics as Dog Starts Acting Strangely—Then Vet Discovers the Cause
Owner Panics as Dog Starts Acting Strangely—Then Vet Discovers the Cause

Newsweek

timean hour ago

  • Newsweek

Owner Panics as Dog Starts Acting Strangely—Then Vet Discovers the Cause

Based on facts, either observed and verified firsthand by the reporter, or reported and verified from knowledgeable sources. Newsweek AI is in beta. Translations may contain inaccuracies—please refer to the original content. A pet owner was left stunned after rushing their dog to the emergency vet believing she had suffered a serious neurological issue—only to discover the pup had accidentally ingested an edible. Janelle Alexander (@ 42, from Redding, California, shared a now-viral TikTok showing their dog Zoey's dazed condition after unknowingly consuming THC. The video, which has racked up more than 29,000 likes and over 1.1 million views, captured Zoey's unusual behavior and sparked widespread conversation among fellow pet owners. Edibles are cannabis-infused food items that contain tetrahydrocannabinol (THC), the psychoactive component of marijuana. While relatively safe for humans in small doses, THC can be toxic for dogs. Alexander told Newsweek: "We were relaxing on the couch when Zoey's dad and I suddenly realized we hadn't seen Zoey in awhile. She typically lays in our lap in the evenings, getting in all the cuddles. Her dad went to find her. He called out for me from the kitchen that something was wrong. Zoey could barely open her eyes. A split image showing the dog on the way to the emergency vet; and waiting. A split image showing the dog on the way to the emergency vet; and waiting. @ "Struggled to stand up, and couldn't bear weight on her hind legs. She had been lying in a puddle of her own urine and continued to lose bladder control as we assessed her. We were terrified. We were convinced she had hurt her spine or had a sudden neurological problem," Alexander said. She added that it was especially distressing because Zoey's dad had lost his previous dog, a chocolate Labrador, to oral bone cancer the year before. The experience triggered a wave of panic and PTSD. While her partner carried Zoey to the car, Alexander contacted emergency veterinary services. They rushed to the only emergency clinic available in nearby Cottonwood, California. Upon examining Zoey's unsteady movements and lack of coordination, vets asked if she might have ingested anything toxic. Alexander and her partner were stumped. "We don't have THC in our home. I don't even drink alcohol," Alexander said. Despite their confusion, blood tests were run, and the results came back positive for THC. The vet said that cases like Zoey's were becoming increasingly common. Many dogs are exposed to cannabis products in public places—parks, neighborhoods, campgrounds—without their owners realizing it. "Sadly, it doesn't stop at THC. They treat dogs for methamphetamines and other toxins people manage to lose in these public places," Alexander said. While the couple still doesn't know exactly where Zoey picked it up, they suspect it happened during one of their recent outdoor adventures. "We take Zoey everywhere with us: walks, hikes, camping trips, dog parks," they said. Fortunately, the vet was optimistic about Zoey's recovery. They administered IV fluids to flush out her system—"dilution is the solution to pollution!"—and sent her home with activated charcoal to reduce further absorption of the THC. Alexander continued: "We got her home, gave her lots of water, some snacks and put her to bed. She was back to her usual, loving, happy, and cuddly self the next morning." She said the experience was so traumatic that she felt compelled to make a video in hopes of helping other pet owners recognize the signs. "This dog is our soul dog, healed a lot of pain for both of us … I thought, 'Gosh, it would have great to know this before! Still would have gotten her into the vet, but maybe it would have saved us the panic and heartbreak of thinking this was fatal?'" The signs the couple wanted to highlight are: loss of coordination, urinary incontinence, sensitivity to light, sound, touch and disorientation. The video struck a chord with many TikTok users who shared their own similar experiences. "Great job taking her in, you never really know what it could be. Better to be safe than sorry," posted Kira. "Put a fan blowing on them and smooth jazz with extra cuddles. They will have the zoomies in approximately 3 hours," commented Britt. "We spent $600 to find out our husky was high. Still have no idea how it was possible though," said Kimberly Kopet. "Happened to my 5 months old pup a few months ago. I was crying but thankfully my bff [best friend forever] is a vet tech so we made a FaceTime and she immediately knew … We think he found a roach in the park on our walk. Poor dude was very confused for a couple of hours," another user wrote. "I thought my 15 year old chihuahua had a stroke or something. nope, just waited till he was an old man to steal a nug [piece of marijuana]. I was so embarrassed at the vet," said Brittany Hooten. Do you have funny and adorable videos or pictures of your pet you want to share? Send them to life@ with some details about your best friend, and they could appear in our Pet of the Week lineup.

Air quality alert issued for northern Minnesota due to Canada wildfire smoke
Air quality alert issued for northern Minnesota due to Canada wildfire smoke

Yahoo

time3 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Air quality alert issued for northern Minnesota due to Canada wildfire smoke

The Brief The Minnesota Pollution Control Agency (MPCA) issued an air quality alert for northern Minnesota. The alert is in place until Friday at 7 p.m. Smoke from wildfires in Canada led to the alert being issued. (FOX 9) - The Minnesota Pollution Control Agency (MPCA) has issued an air quality alert for areas in northern Minnesota. What we know An air quality was issued for the majority of northern Minnesota, and is in place until Friday at 7 p.m. MPCA issued a red air quality alert, which is considered unhealthy for everyone, for areas including International Falls, Roseau, and the Tribal Nation of Red Lake. There is an orange air quality alert, which is considered unhealthy for sensitive groups, for areas including Bemidji, East Grand Forks, Two Harbors, Hibbing, Ely, Duluth, and the Tribal Nations of Red Lake, Leech Lake, Grand Portage, and Fond du Lac. For a full description of each air quality category, click here. Dig deeper In red air quality areas, wildfire smoke may make the sky look smoky, and the air look hazy. You may also smell smoke. MPCA says this is unhealthy for everyone. Being outside could cause these symptoms: irritated eyes, nose, and throat, coughing, chest tightness, or shortness of breath. Officials say to reduce outdoor activities, and reduce exposure. Orange air quality areas will also make the sky look hazy, and residents may smell smoke. This air quality is unhealthy for sensitive groups, and may aggravate heart and lung disease, and cardiovascular and respiratory conditions. What you can do To keep up to date on the air quality, click here.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store